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Defeated election candidate urges army to obey him

Democratic Republic of Congo’s main opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi (pictured), declared defeated in last month’s controversial election, heightened tensions Sunday by urging the army to obey his orders and not those of President Joseph Kabila.

REUTERS - Congo’s top opposition figure on Sunday urged the armed forces to obey him after losing elections he said were fraudulent and added he would offer a “great prize” to anyone who captured President Joseph Kabila.

A close aide to Kabila dismissed Etienne Tshisekedi’s comments as showmanship and said the opposition leader had made similar calls against former President Mobutu Sese Seko that had been ignored by the people.

However, the veteran politician’s comments do threaten to escalate a row over the results of a Nov. 28 presidential contest, which international observers say lacked credibility.

“I call on all of you to look for (Kabila) wherever he is in the country and bring him here alive,” Tshisekedi said in his first news conference since official figures showed he was soundly beaten by Kabila.

“If you bring Kabila here to me you’ll receive a great prize,” he said, urging the armed forces to obey the country’s “legitimate authority”.

The president, who was thought to be in Kinshasa on Sunday evening, has broad support within the military, although his rival is strongly backed by Kinshasa residents.

The election was meant to put Congo on a path to greater stability after decades of turmoil, but has instead deepened divisions. Around 20 people were reported killed in clashes before and afterwards as opposition supporters took to the streets accusing the government of vote rigging.

Election observers have said the poll, Congo’s second since a 1998-2003 civil war that killed more than five million people, was marred by irregularities, though Congo’s election commission has said any problems did not affect the ultimate outcome.

“We as a government have followed every step of the constitution,” Kikaya Bin Karubi, the Congo’s envoy to Britain, told Reuters.

Kabila took around 49 percent of the vote to Tshisekedi’s 32 percent, according to results ratified by Congo’s Supreme Court on Friday. Tshisekedi has rejected the outcome and declared himself president.

Kabila, who came to power after his father Laurent was killed in 2001, admitted last week there were “problems” with the election but said the legitimacy of the outcome could not be doubted.

The U.S. ambassador to Congo called the election “seriously flawed” while U.S.-backed observers, the Carter Center, said results “lack credibility”.

Congo is at the bottom of the U.N.’s human development index and investors say it is one of the toughest places in the world to do business, despite its vast mineral riches.